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Chapter X - Dad And The Donovans - On Our Selection - Steele Rudd, Book, Etext A SWELTERING summer’s afternoon. A heat that curled and withered the very weeds. The cornblades drooping, sulking still. Mother and Sal ironing, mopping their faces with a towel http://www.telelib.com/words/authors/R/RuddSteele/prose/onourselection/ourselect
Extractions: A SWELTERING Caw, caw! Dad rose and looked up. Curse Caw, caw, caw He ran towards the tree as though he would hurl it to the ground, and away flew the crows. Joe arrived. Dad turned on him, trembling with rage. you You Damn Dad returned to the house, foaming and vowing to take the gun and shoot Joe down like a wallaby. But when he saw two horses hanging up he hesitated and would have gone away again had Mother not called out that he was wanted. He went in reluctantly. He sat down, and they talked of crops and the weather, and beat about the bush until Donovan said: Never before did Dad show himself such an expert in dissimulation. He shook his head knowingly, and enquired of Donovan if he would take the horse for nothing. Dad rose and looked out the window. The money was paid there and then and receipts drawn up. Then, saying that Mick would come for the horse on the day following, and after offering a little gratuitous advice on seed-wheat and pig-sticking, the Donovans left. Mick remained seated on his horse, bewildered-looking, staring first at Farmer, then at Dad.
OUR NEW SELECTION Rudd, Steele (A. H. Davis) (18681935) 1903 To the memory of The Wives of Australia's Pioneers. To the memory of the Women who first went out and bore the bushland's burdens http://www.gutenberg.net.au/ebooks05/0500131h.html
Extractions: This site is full of FREE ebooks - Check them out at our Home page - Project Gutenberg Australia To the memory of The Wives of Australia's Pioneers. To the memory of the Women who first went out and bore the bushland's burdens and made the silences and solitudes their home. And to the WIVES whom disappointment and misfortune never bereft of hope. To you whose work is never at end, whose days are spent in rearing, in caring, in making, in mending, in comforting and helping; To you who cheerfully strive to make ends meet and keep the home and the homestead together; To you mothers of the yeomanry of our infant nation; Mothers of Australian bushmen; with admiration and respect I dedicate this book. "STEELE RUDD" I. BAPTISING BARTHOLOMEW II. SOME TROUBLE WITH A STEER III. GOOD-BYE TO THE OLD HOME IV. A FRESH START ... XXI. THE WATTLE-BLOSSOM BRIDE The baby, twelve months old, was to be christened, and Mother decided to give a party. She had been thinking about the party for some time, but decision was contemporaneous with the arrival of a certain mysterious parcel. We were preparing for the christening. Dad and Dave drawing water; Joe raking husks and corn-cobs into a heap at the door and burning them; Little Bill collecting the pumpkins and pie-melons strewn about the yard. Mother and Sal were busy inside. Mother stood on a box. Sal spread newspapers on the table and smeared them over with paste, then handed them cautiously to Mother, who fixed them on the wall. The baby crawled on the floor.
Steele Rudd Biography Summary | BookRags.com Steele Rudd summary with 19 pages of lesson plans, quotes, chapter summaries, analysis, encyclopedia entries, essays, research information, and more. http://www.bookrags.com/Steele_Rudd